You usually make money by supporting artists at art fairs, and Frieze New York is no different from other galleries in this regard. The dealer’s first priority is to make money, while the attendees’ purpose is to spend their money on art, if not on art then at least on overpriced coffee and sandwiches. Not to mention the cost of admission, which can run up to $200, which as an industry professional I’m lucky enough not to have to pay. Regardless, there are many better places to see art in New York than at art fairs, and many of them are free.
But, as the best dealers realize, there’s a way to showcase and monetize good art, and so do some of the 68 galleries at this year’s Frieze, which just took place at the Shed in Hudson Yards. In this well-capitalized event, these select few bring ambitious photography, quirky paintings by self-taught artists, and downright bizarre sculptures.
Which booths stand out among the crowd? Here are eight of the best talks from Frieze New York, which runs through Sunday.
Cindy Sherman at Hauser & Wirth


Image credit: Silvio Garcia/©2026 Cindy Sherman/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Big gallery booths are often forgotten, but Hauser & Wirth’s stand at this show is not to be missed, as it marks the debut of new work by photographer Cindy Sherman, best known for her “Untitled Film Stills.” As in that series from the late 1970s, Sherman once again posed for the camera, this time in lavish outfits that walked the line between elegance and flamboyance. In one of the photos, Sherman is seen sitting on a stool, wearing a crown and her eyebrows hidden in makeup. The character’s headdress is made of paper, and the starry sky behind him is clearly a backdrop – it’s just a dress-up game involving an ordinary citizen pretending to be a monarch. However, by striking these poses, Sherman creates the impression of an important person, or at least the belief that she is. These photos prove Sherman is still the media queen she is.
Karla Knight, Paulina Peavy, Esther Pearl Watson and Melvin Way, Andrew Edlin Gallery


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
Some advice for dealers: If you must display multiple artists’ booths, at least tie the works to a theme. (Don’t simply clear out inventory.) Take a note from the Andrew Edlin Gallery, whose Smart Frieze booth brings together four artists grappling with alien creatures and a world beyond our own. Paulina Peavy claimed to be able to communicate with spirits in the 20th century, represented by a series of brilliant abstract works that included a pearl-headed moth creature moving through a choppy forest. Meanwhile, paintings by Esther Pearl Watson and Karla Knight express an ongoing fascination with extraterrestrials—a timely topic in light of the Pentagon’s recent release of so-called UFO documents. But the quietest star of the booth was a Melvin Way drawing that seemed to depict a non-existent compound. People want to know what Wei knows that the rest of us don’t.
Evelyn Wang Taocheng(Carlos/Ishikawa)


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
London-based Carlos/Ishikawa Gallery, which shared a booth with its New York chapter, brought a number of artists, the standout of which was Evelyn Tao Cheng Wang, whose paintings consider the value of art. Wang has two wonderful works, both painted on a monumental scale, that continue her long-standing interest in Agnes Martin, a postwar painter known for her light canvases with hand-painted grids. In one painting, Wang took Martin’s blue and pink composition and overlaid it with a ram’s head and flowers from a Georgia O’Keeffe work. One explanation might suggest that Wang’s painting traces a queer lineage—Martin had female romantic partners, while O’Keeffe’s sexuality has long been a subject of debate. Another might argue that it solves the problem that when styles are endlessly copied, nothing can remain single. Wang posted a small note next to the painting, telling those who would interpret it: “Don’t take it seriously!”
Virginia Jaramillo, Hales Gallery


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
After recently completing an exciting US tour, Virginia Jaramillo is still creating extraordinary abstract works that experiment with line. It can divide space, like the thin arcs of pink and blue she painted on a mostly black canvas, or it can help outline previously unseen shapes, like the twists of black and green in a purple painting, creating what looks like a champagne coupe.
These recent, small-scale works are installed around the stand’s main attraction: a long canvas titled 2021 Quantain which a network of colorful lines connects yellow emanations at both ends. Talking about similar works created in the same year, Jaramillo once said that these were “channels of communication.” Their information is clearly opaque.
Marc Selwyn Fine Arts and Akinsanya Kambon of Ortuzar


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
Ahead of the opening of an Akinsanya Kambon retrospective later this month at New York’s Sculpture Center and the Center for Art, Research, and Alliances, two of the artist’s galleries have joined forces to create an unforgettable sampling of art. Kambon was a leader of the Sacramento chapter of the Black Panther Party in the 1960s and now produces ceramics that revive African traditions. African Drum #2 For example, (2024) is a three-headed container, implying African drum The drums used by enslaved West Africans were banned from being played after they were brought to the United States in the 18th century. The piece was fired using the Raku technique, where the ceramic is removed from the kiln while still hot, and like many of the Kambon pieces on the stand, it had tiny cracks. Yet despite the hardships it went through during its production, the piece has endured.
Shannon Bull at Daniel Faria Gallery


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
In addition to superb works by Stephanie Comilang and June Clark, the booth also features two tapestries by Shannon Bool, both depicting sculptures by 20th-century German artists Fritz Klimsch and Georg Kolbe. Both artists were known for sculpting the female form as a way to achieve the minimalist aesthetic highly prized by European modernists. Yet Bull deconstructs these figures in her weaving, revealing a tangle of robot-like gadgets beneath their elegant legs. Fittingly, the pieces are machine-made: Boole made them using a jacquard loom, a device that the 19th-century mathematician Ada Lovelace compared to an analog computer, and then finished the surface with hand embroidery.
Seba Calfuqueo from W-Galeria


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
sin (2026), the largest work in the fashion booth, features a ceramic mouth that sprays a stream of synthetic hair arranged to spell out the eponymous word, which translates to “blame” in Spanish. Who is blamed, and for what? This work does not tell us, although Seba Calfuqueo has previously said that hair “had a special significance in Mapuche cosmology” and allowed her to “escape the binary system.”
Calf Cuo, a young Mapuche artist based in Santiago, Chile, who is stirring up a storm on his biennial tour, seems to suggest that a violated body is not necessarily a defeated body. She returns to this theme, albeit indirectly, in a set of silver-coated ceramics based on Mapuche objects from the collection of the Museum of Ethnology in Berlin. In recreating them, Calfquio claimed ownership of objects taken from her people and displayed in Europe for others to see. The stand took top honors in the individual presentations in the Frieze Focus section, and for good reason.
Deondre Davis by Gordon Robichaux


Photo credit: Alex Greenberger/ARTnews
Deondre Davis has a habit of picking up found items and applying false eyelashes to them. It’s a sculptural piece that’s both strange and mesmerizing: a lash-lined sculpture made of gold hinges mounted in the corner of the booth. What makes this work so hypnotic? I’m not sure I can tell you entirely, but perhaps it has something to do with the way Davis makes cold, industrial objects seem tangible, even slightly alien. At the very least, he seems interested in subverting the rules, which may be attributed to his unusual entry into the art world—he didn’t go to art school. indeed, Untitled (Brick Dust) #2is a new work on paper on display near Hinge that is characterized by the ordered logic of the grid, which Davis subverts by spraying bricks all over the place.










